News

AIDS in the U.S. was first recognized among gay men in the 1980s. It couldn't have happened at a worse time. After a long struggle, American culture had finally begun to accept gay men.
HIV symptoms vary by the stage of infection, known as acute HIV infection (Stage 1), chronic HIV infection (Stage 2), and AIDS (Stage 3). During primary infection, the symptoms are caused by the ...
Black gay and bisexual men now account for one in four new HIV infections in America, according to a new report by the Black AIDS Institute. Host Michel Martin speaks with director Phill Wilson ...
Some people infected by HIV develop a flu-like illness within 2 to 4 weeks after the virus enters the body. This illness, known as primary HIV infection, may last for a few weeks. TheHealthSite.com ...
Gay and bisexual men continue to be at the greatest risk. If diagnosis rates remain constant, 1 in 6 males who have sex with other males will be diagnosed with HIV in their lifetime.
Kharfen said the disproportionate number of gay and bisexual men with HIV/AIDS has created a “greater risk” for new cases. In other words, because more gay men have HIV/AIDS, more new cases occur.
Today is National Gay Men’s HIV/AIDS Awareness Day, a day to end the stigma and recognize the disproportionate and ongoing impact of HIV/AIDS on gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has published some sobering data on one of the world’s most serious health challenges — HIV/AIDS — and how race and ethnicity can ha… ...
According to Vital Signs, from 2010 to 2019, HIV diagnosis among white, gay men decreased from 7,500 to 5,100. For Black, gay men, that number only budged slightly, going from 9,000 new infections ...
— -- A map documenting HIV rates for gay and bisexual men has revealed they are most at risk for becoming infected in multiple southern cities, according to a report being presented today by ...
President Trump has pledged to eliminate HIV in America by 2030. But in the South, rates of HIV/AIDS among black gay and bisexual men remain stubbornly high.